- Joined
- May 7, 2007
- Messages
- 5,262
- Reaction score
- 226
- Points
- 63
- Location
- Hatfield, England
- Country
- England
- Display Name
- Julia
After Mark posted about his Newts in a beer barrel , I thought I had best check up on my tiddlers that are living out in the shed.
I had looked at them the day prior and they where merrily swimming under a thin layer of ice. I removed a portion of it and fed them all. Removing the ice may have not been a good idea. The next day I found one had been partially frozen into the ice on the surface. I removed the section of ice and decided to remove them all. One was engulfed in an pocket of water surrounded by ice, but a limb was frozen in. All where put into a lidded container with their ice water and some willow moss and brought in doors. More or less immediately the newts became more lively. The two that had been most in contact with ice show no signs at all of any harm at all. I am very relieved
I hadn't really seen how pretty they are until I had rescued them.
Here are a few, not too spectacular photo's of some of them. The first is when they where larvae, the last two are from today.
I had looked at them the day prior and they where merrily swimming under a thin layer of ice. I removed a portion of it and fed them all. Removing the ice may have not been a good idea. The next day I found one had been partially frozen into the ice on the surface. I removed the section of ice and decided to remove them all. One was engulfed in an pocket of water surrounded by ice, but a limb was frozen in. All where put into a lidded container with their ice water and some willow moss and brought in doors. More or less immediately the newts became more lively. The two that had been most in contact with ice show no signs at all of any harm at all. I am very relieved
Here are a few, not too spectacular photo's of some of them. The first is when they where larvae, the last two are from today.
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